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Naples Zoo at Caribbean Gardens

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Address:
1590 Goodlette-Frank Rd
Naples, Florida 34102

Phone:
239.262.5409

Hours:
Daily 9am-4:30pm

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Naples Zoo at Caribbean Gardens
Naples Florida Zoo 
Founded in 1919, Naples Zoo at Caribbean Gardens offers a variety of exotic animals from apes to zebras inside a 44-acre historic tropical garden. Much more than a walk-thru zoo, guests can hand-feed the herd of giraffe and enjoy a full day of wildlife shows and activities.

Two feature shows in the multimedia Safari Canyon theater present live animals along with live camera close ups and wildlife video. The zoo also features the Primate Expedition Cruise for observing rare monkeys, lemurs and apes; the Meet the Keeper Series; Alligator Bay Feeding; and Jungle Larry® and Safari Jane’s® Snakes Alive! featuring venomous species. Visitors also enjoy shopping in the gift shop and dining options from Wynn’s at the Zoo, a Naples tradition now available in the zoo. Open daily from 9:00 a.m. with the last ticket sold at 4 p.m. Located one block south of Golden Gate Parkway at 1590 Goodlette-Frank Road in Naples.

Naples Zoo at Caribbean Gardens
Naples Fl Zoo
Naples Zoo at Caribbean Gardens is a nationally accredited zoo and yet much more than a zoo. A paved path almost a mile in length winds past rare and beautiful animals residing within a 44-acre historic botanical garden founded in 1919 with a fascinating history. In this tropical setting, you can take delight at seeing many of your favorite animals like lions, bears, and monkeys. In addition, you'll also discover an array of more rarely seen creatures like the striped hyenas or the fierce and wildly popular African honey badgers. Other feature exhibits include the new giant anteater and other wonders of South America; cheetahs; Giraffe Preview Exhibit where you can hand-feed these gentle giants; African Oasis; Tiger Forest;  Black Bear Hammock; a certified Backyard Wildlife Habitat for observing wild butterflies; Leopard Rock; and Fosas: Madagascar’s Legendary Carnivores.

Beyond the exhibits and accredited arboretum, the best of the zoo can be seen by taking in the full day of fun and entertaining presentations and activities that have a solid conservation foundation. Safari Canyon enables you to understand wildlife in exciting ways through living animals, wildlife video, and live camera close-ups. The Primate Expedition Cruise takes you through islands inhabited by monkeys, lemurs, and apes. You can also enjoy the Meet the Keeper Series, Jungle Larry® & Safari Jane’s® Snakes Alive! and Alligator Bay Feeding. Children enjoy exploring fun play areas.

You can also relax in a tranquil setting looking over the water to watch the lemurs, monkeys, and apes on their islands. In the more densely foliated northern gardens, you can walk beneath the expansive canopy of giant ficus trees and their sprawling aerial root systems. Combining conservation and recreation, Naples Zoo offers fun for every generation. You'll also discover a number of ways to get involved in helping animals. The zoo is accredited by the prestigious Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA) and is also an institutional member of the American Association of Zoo Keepers, Inc. The historic garden also holds membership in the American Public Gardens Association and is accredited by The Morton Register of Arboreta.

Admission Fees for Naples Zoo at Caribbean Gardens
Naples Florida Zoo
Adults ages 13 and up $22.95
Children ages 3 - 12 $14.95
Children ages 2 and under Free
Prices subject to change without notice.
view all pricing info
 
The History of Naples Zoo at Caribbean Gardens
Naples Zoo
The story of the Naples Zoo at Caribbean Gardens begins with botanist Dr. Henry Nehrling. An early conservationist, Nehrling wrote in 1904, "It is high time to protect and preserve what is still left." He first acquired the Naples site in 1919 to avoid a repetition of the disastrous freeze to his plant collection in central Florida in 1917. At that time, this portion of Naples was being sold in farm plots for agriculture. In regard to his new work, he stated, "In my 66th year, I again became a pioneer of the wilderness." His newfound devotion allowed him to say in 1925, "My garden, containing about 3,000 species of tropical plants, is a constant source of intense pleasure and delight." His new home, the famed "Tropical Garden," one of the earliest plant collections in Florida, occupied the northern acreage of the present day Gardens. Many of his plantings, still remaining, provided the inspiration for current endeavors. Dr. David Fairchild, the veteran plant explorer associated with Fairchild Tropical Gardens in Coral Gables, wrote of Nehrling, "He was always a naturalist at heart . . . a great plantsman of the type so rare that one can hope to meet only a few, even in a long life of travel."

Leading scientists and environmentalists of the day consulted with the keenly observant botanist about his work during their visits to his gardens. Nehrling's guests included the likes of Theodore Roosevelt, nature writer John Burroughs, horticulturist Liberty Hyde Bailey, pioneer naturalist Charles Torrey Simpson, botanist David Fairchild, and famed inventor Thomas Edison. During his work for the Office of Foreign Seed and Plant Introduction to the U.S. Bureau of Plant Industry, Nehrling introduced over 300 new and beneficial plants to the United States including the colorful and immensely popular caladium. Dr. Whitmer Stone of the Academy of Natural Sciences at Philadelphia said of him, "A typical German professor of the old school, of courtly manner and enthusiastically absorbed in his work, he made a host of warm friends and was pleased as a child when visitors admired his garden."

Following his death in 1929, however, more than twenty years were to pass before his garden was admired again. Of Nehrling himself, David Fairchild reflected, "The wildlife is passing. Man is destroying it. Dr. Nehrling loved it and taught thousands to follow his lead." Indeed, although he received some recognition in his lifetime including the Meyer Medal for service in the introduction of plants to the United States, the far reaching work of Dr. Nehrling is continuing to receive even more attention into the present time including the "Plant Protection Award of Eminence" and "Honor Roll of Eminence" awarded by the Florida Department of Agriculture in 1997. Most of his writings are maintained at Rollins College. Two of his texts were recently edited and republished by a Smithsonian Institute botanist.

The story of Nehrling's tropical garden resumes in 1946 during lunch at the Naples Hotel. Julius Fleischmann of Cincinnati, Ohio arrived in town to soon change the vision of Naples. His grandfather established Fleischmann Yeast that eventually became Standard Brands. Along with entrepreneurial success, the Fleischmanns also had a history of cultural contributions. One of Julius' Naples contemporaries stated he "was active in the family business, but his interests were divergent and included publishing, ownership in several hotels, theatrical production, director and president of the Ballet Russe in Monte Carlo, and he was one of the most renowned yachtsmen in the world." In the 1930s, Fleischmann had sailed the Pacific on a commission to survey plants of the South Seas for the United States Department of Agriculture. During that trip, Fleischmann was also documenting previously uncharted waters. Those charts proved very useful for the military during World War II. He also collected many artifacts currently held by the Cincinnati Museum of Natural History.

By the early 1950s, he had begun constructing buildings along present day 3rd Street. In 1952, after choosing a dedicated staff, Fleischmann set about the immense restoration of Nehrling's garden. Clearing a trail through the gardens, removing years of debris, nurturing old plantings, digging lakes and planting a multitude of new species, Fleischmann created a showplace for his guests to see the almost forgotten dream of 1919. By 1954, complete with an array of tropical birds, the garden was ready to delight guests once again and now under the name Caribbean Gardens. Naples itself was still in its infancy. Early brochures for the garden describe the garden's location as "just north of Naples."

A vacation in 1967 initiated the next era for the garden. Lawrence and Nancy Jane Tetzlaff, known as Jungle Larry® and Safari Jane®, visited the gardens as they were seeking out a winter quarters for their collection of rare animals. The Tetzlaffs were well known expedition leaders and zoo operators in the Midwest. Larry Tetzlaff had taken his childhood interest in animals and built it into a lifelong mission. Following the publication of one of his scientific papers while still in college, Tetzlaff was offered a job by the famed animal collector Frank Buck during the 1939 World's Fair in New York City.

And that was just the beginning. In those early years, Tetzlaff experienced all manners of animal work - from doing stunt work for Johnny Weissmuller in the Tarzan films to milking venomous snakes to provide serum for the soldiers in the Pacific islands. After the war, Tetzlaff returned to the Midwest to communicate his knowledge of the animal kingdom. Audiences ranging from school children to supreme court justices listened to his message of conservation. During this time, Nancy Jane joined him not only as wife but also as partner. Together they traversed both lush Amazonian rainforest and dusty African roads. On their expeditions, Larry recorded cultures and the animal life on 16mm motion picture film while Nancy documented with still photography. Back home in the states, they shared the wonders of these foreign locales in person and on television. Combining film footage and living animals, the Tetzlaffs taught many to appreciate the awesome diversity our planet offers and the critical need to protect it. Their early conservation programs also included domestic concerns like their mid-1960s program called "The Vanishing Everglades." And Larry's often repeated phrase "Conservation is the name of the game" was in print years before the Endangered Species Act was established.

Beginning in 1964, they also operated a zoological area within the Cedar Point theme park in Ohio and began entertaining and educating over a million guests a season. Although committed to their summer audience, the Tetzlaffs wanted a warm winter home so the animals could be outside all year long. During that vacation in 1967, the Tetzlaff family fell in love with the gardens but learned the property was not available. The Tetzlaffs did not forget Naples, however, and, shortly after Fleischmann's death, the Tetzlaffs were contacted to see if they would exhibit their animals within the gardens. They readily agreed. Surveying the grounds, however, the Tetzlaffs then faced the challenge of carefully placing the exhibits around decades old exotic plants and trees. The magnificence of beautiful animals in such a garden proved well worth all the effort. On September 1, 1969, a wide range of the world's animals greeted guests for the first time.

Since that time, the tranquillity of the tropical garden has inspired many successful breeding programs for some of the earth's most beautiful animals. Zoo director Jack Hanna commented, "When you think of Jungle Larry, you think of a man and his family who literally dedicated their lives to exotic creatures of the earth." Although Larry Tetzlaff passed away in 1984, the Tetzlaff family, the nonprofit board of directors, and staff continue his vision through expanded exhibits and educational activities. You can easily see that vision today in presentations like Safari Canyon -- a technologically updated version of what Larry & Nancy Jane did years ago with their films and live animals. The concept for the new show was envisioned by their oldest son David Tetzlaff and the graphics and video are coordinated by youngest son Tim Tetzlaff. In 2000, one of a handful of bronze markers celebrating Naples Diamond Jubilee was placed in the shade of the large ficus tree by the Lily Pond commemorating the historical value of the garden including Dr. Nehrling's pioneering work. 

The Zoo also continues its rich tradition of conservation with varied projects around the world from the panthers of Florida to the lemurs of Madagascar along with planting thousands of trees each month in Africa, Asia, or the Americas. In 2001, Naples Zoo achieved national accreditation by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums, the organization that sets the highest standards for zoos and aquaria. AZA accreditation is reviewed every five years and was also achieved in 2006 and 2011.

During this time of earning national accreditation, the Zoo faced its biggest crisis. Since 1969, the property was leased from the Fleischmann estate. In 2002, the side of the Fleischmann family that inherited the land let it be known that they were interested in selling the 44 acres of Zoo property and the nearly 120 surrounding acres - the first time the property had been for sale since Julius Fleischmann acquired it in the 1950s. Armed with this knowledge and knowing that an outside buyer would bulldoze the zoo and gardens, the Tetzlaffs began public meetings with the Board of Collier County Commissioners regarding a public purchase of the property. During this time, the Fleischmann family waited to allow the community to act. In 2004, a referendum was placed before the voters to let them decide the fate of the Zoo.

Wonderfully, the land purchase was approved with a record 73% of voters in favor. An arrangement with The Trust for Public Land allowed the final transition. And to make this purchase easier for the county and other parties, the Tetzlaffs converted the Zoo to a 501(c)(3) charitable organization and handed over control to the new Naples Zoo Board of Directors. This change allowed the community to keep their historic trees and Zoo with decades of improvements and national accreditation. David Tetzlaff took a position at another zoo in 2012 while Tim Tetzlaff continues to serve as Director of Conservation and Communications.

Today, with the land paid off years early and its future secured, the nonprofit Naples Zoo is poised for another great leap forward as the people's Zoo under the leadership of President & CEO Jack Mulvena and the Board. Having undergone Strategic Planning and now with a Master Plan that creates exciting new ways to connects children with nature including the historic botanicals, the Zoo invites you to be part of the ongoing success and promising future that awaits by visiting, becoming a member, or becoming a donor.

We hope you've enjoyed learning about the people who nurtured the garden you experience today. As you can see, it's been a wild nine decades with an even wilder future ahead!

The Mission of the Naples Zoo at Caribbean Gardens
Best Florida Zoo
The mission of the Naples Zoo is to continue our proud legacy of delighting and informing guests, and to inspire conservation through innovative, intimate, and memorable experiences.
 
Information courtesy Naples Zoo at Caribbean Gardens

 
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